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\f0\b\fs24 \cf0 Southeast Asia Faces Increasingly Intense Climate Events
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\cf0 by Joseph D\'92Urso\
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\cf0 April 2, 2015: London - Densely populated Asian islands - including Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan and the Philippines - and countries in Southeast Asia particularly are likely to face more intense climate events in future, analysts said on Thursday.\
Islands are especially vulnerable when they have large populations, and with much of their land exposed to storm surges and sea-level rises, according to research published by risk analysis group Verisk Maplecroft.\
Researchers found that Taiwan, hit last year by Typhoon Matmo, was most at risk. They stressed the need for all sectors to understand the extent of exposure to extreme events and long-term climate change in countries deemed most vulnerable. "The potential impacts of climate change on physical structures, industrial processes, supply chains, and critical infrastructure are potentially devastating," researchers said in the report.\
A study by the same firm last month found 8 of the 10 cities most at risk from such events are in the Philippines, which had "poor institutional and societal capacity to manage, respond ,and recover from natural hazard events". Typhoon Haiyan killed 6,300 people in 2013 in the Philippines, which is battered by more than 20 typhoons a year.\
Nearly 20,000 people were killed by an earthquake and tsunami in Japan's main Honshu island in 2011.\
"While uncertain, climate change projections suggest that the typhoons may be less frequent in the region, but become more intense," the group's new report said. The weather events known as El Ni\'f1o and La Ni\'f1a exacerbate this, the study said. El Ni\'f1o, the warming of Pacific Ocean surface temperatures which can cause drought in some parts of the world and flooding in others, and La Ni\'f1a, an irregular event caused by cooling water temperatures, both threaten Southeast Asia, it said.\
Droughts in the "extreme risk" Philippines, as well as in Indonesia, are "strongly related" to El Ni\'f1o, the report said. It blamed La Ni\'f1a for flooding in the Philippines, as well as in Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam.\
The study tried to quantify the risk of a country being hit by extreme climate events such as droughts, wildfires, storms and floods, as well as the dangers posed by changing temperatures and sea levels.\
China is "high risk,\'94 due to increased industrial, domestic and agricultural competition for water, while some northern parts of the country have already experienced reductions in rainfall, the study said.\
Elsewhere in Asia, Bangladesh also ranked high on the list of places at risk. Cyclone Sidr in 2007 killed around 3,500 people in Bangladesh, while Cyclone Aila in 2009 killed more than 300 in Bangladesh and around 150 in India.\
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\cf0 www.reuters.com/article/2015/04/02/us-climatechange-events-asia-idUSKBN0MS5IR20150402}